{"id":24,"date":"2006-05-26T22:13:42","date_gmt":"2006-05-27T02:13:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.unitstep.net\/blog\/2006\/05\/26\/meta-crazy-with-delicious\/"},"modified":"2006-06-20T20:55:34","modified_gmt":"2006-06-21T00:55:34","slug":"meta-crazy-with-delicious","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/unitstep.net\/blog\/2006\/05\/26\/meta-crazy-with-delicious\/","title":{"rendered":"Meta-crazy with del.icio.us"},"content":{"rendered":"
So, I’ve been using del.icio.us<\/a> for a little while now, and I’m very impressed. I don’t know how I lived without this before, when I was stuck in the dark ages of offline bookmarks and always worrying about how I’d synchronize my bookmarks between my computers and wondering how I’d combine them and their many (overlapping) categories. It was an organizational nightmare, but I put up with it because, well, I’m a neat freak and like organizing stuff.<\/p>\n Del.icio.us changes all of that. Being a Google fanboy, I first tried out their bookmarks<\/a> service, which was functional and tidy but very spartan at the same time. While it supports multiple tags, a crucial feature in my mind, and has some pretty neat browser plugins<\/a> available, it lacks many of the features that del.icio.us has, such as bundles (will get to that later), and sharing\/syndication of your links. So, after fully switching to del.icio.us and manually transferring the handful of links I’d accumulated on Google bookmarks, I’m fully in del.icio.us and loving it.<\/p>\n